mouth
Origin

Old English mūth, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch mond and German Mund, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin mentum ‘chin’.

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Jas 3:3 Behold, we put bits G5469 in the horses' mouths, that they may obey us; and we turn about their whole body.
khal-ee-nos'; from G5465; a curb or head-stall (as curbing the spirit):—bit, bridle.

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G4750
stom'-a; mouth-the mouth, as part of the body: of man, of animals, of fish, etc.

since thoughts of a man's soul find verbal utterance by his mouth, the "heart" or "soul" and the mouth are distinguished

the edge of a sword
Sword/Words

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Natural frequency, also known as eigenfrequency, is the frequency at which a system tends to oscillate in the absence of any driving or damping force.

The motion pattern of a system oscillating at its natural frequency is called the normal mode (if all parts of the system move sinusoidally with that same frequency).

If the oscillating system is driven by an external force at the frequency at which the amplitude of its motion is greatest (close to a natural frequency of the system), this frequency is called resonant frequency.

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The Excellence of Love
1Co 13:1
Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal

And though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing.

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late Old English, "benevolence for the poor," also "Christian love in its highest manifestation," from Old French charité "(Christian) charity, mercy, compassion; alms; charitable foundation" (12c.), from Latin.

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Middle English: from Old French merci ‘pity’ or ‘thanks’, from Latin merces, merced- ‘reward’, in Christian Latin ‘pity, favour, heavenly reward’.

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reword (v.) c. 1600, "to repeat, put in words again," from re- "back, again" + word (v.) "put in words." The meaning "express in other words" is by 1882.

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late 14c., "stated explicitly, not implied, clearly made known" from Old French espres, expres (13c.), from Latin expressus "clearly presented, distinct, articulated precisely," past participle of exprimere (see express (v. 1)).

Borrowed from Middle French expression, from Late Latin expressiō, expressiōnem (“a pressing out”).

Morphologically express +‎ -ion.

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